UK Housing policy favours landlords, not households.

This is not about a Beatles’ birthplace. The Welsh Streets in Liverpool 8 occupy the front line of national battles on Housing and Regeneration for good reason. They have lessons on urban policy for governments of all parties.

The failings of UK housing policy since 1989 can be summed up in one simple sentence: they favour the landlord; and disadvantage the household – whether tenant or owner occupier.

David Cameron and Lord Heseltine visit Madryn St. I was their guide – standing next to the man with the orange tie.

They also hopeto build a further 70 on currently occupied ‘phase 3’ streets, but don’t have funding. They have included Gwydir, Treborth and Pengwyrn Streets in their application for clearance, although the majority remain occupied and recently renovated.

Current plans mean £35m will deliver a net loss of c.290 homes (c.40 to be retained).

If built, each of the 150 scheduled new houses will ultimately have cost £233,000 in subsidy to deliver. It will be worth substantially less.

The c.290 net losses in housing numbers will each have taken over £120,000 to achieve.

There are further financial and opportunity costs not accounted for here – securing the area while empty, council tax lost, other investment foregone, dislocation of waiting list households, planning blight, health impacts and so on. These are human costs that go beyond statistics into stressful sleepless nights and neighbourhood divisions.

Although development density will drop from 480 to 150/220 homes, plus the 40 retained (a density drop of c.55 – 60%)the proposed new homes are often smaller than the ones replaced. This is because land is given over to gardens and garages – lower maintenance for the landlord, but less flexible for households.

Liverpool architects Constructive Thinking have shown the 2 bedroom properties Plus Dane Group propose have a floor area of 72.5 sq.m – smaller than the 75 sqm in terraced 2/3 bed homes due for clearance.

That leaves the uncomfortable thought that officials at Plus Dane Group have simply targeted the wrong area for managed decline – but cannot stop digging, for fear of facing up to an expensive, damaging mistake.

A family on the Welsh Streets, now driven out by demolition.

Welsh Streets Clearance Phasing Plan. Phase 3, shown to the SW in orange, is mainly inhabited and has no funding for replacement – so could be grassed over.

The ‘refreshed’ DTZ/Liverpool Council NRA report can be downloaded here.

Nevertheless it contains interesting facts, such as:

Ownership:

Of the 490 properties within the area identified ownership is currently as follows:

Liverpool City Council own 348 properties (4 of which are plots of land)

Plus Dane/CDS own 90 properties (1 of which is plot of land)

52 are privately owned (7 of which are plots of land)

4.12 Figure 4.4 illustrates figures: It shows that from 2002 voids within Princes Park were reducing and fell below the City level in 2004 but have since been increasing and whilst City levels have been falling since 2009, those in Princes Park have remained level significantly above the City average.

[JB – This is because Pathfinder acquisition distorted and then blocked an otherwise improving market – precisely the opposite of its ‘housing market renewal’ purpose]

4.12 It is considered that the fall in vacancy to 2004 was due to developers purchasing properties for refurbishment and sale. The increasing vacancy since 2005/2006 was as the Council’s acquisition programme gained momentum.

4.13 Figure 4.5 illustrates a similar pattern in respect of long term voids.

Mayor Anderson and Minister Shapps on Madryn Street in front of the world’s press on 15th June 2012, to announce Ringo’s house would be saved. Plus Dane Group’s plans mean over 90% of the Welsh Streets 490 properties would go.